The am t wel id in the
miuap the o traied
pwiAted workers to help
a bout mg adt how to
"get,the at for their mat-
was not pt eirward b the form
at kogHiatia
Instead, Jmon said he was
aking all federal d aged e i
btreosd a emmor eemdi.
to esxpkre kly the pobility
of adaptig the Agrcultural

men to e plr "the problems
of adequate cnmmner Idorma
tin."
Johson devoted most ate-
ticm to tisptb ackag eg pro.
"I ewomald legislation to
insre that the coammer has
access to the inuortimo naces
say to make a rational chodem
among competming package
predots," he said.
As for trauth.hiling, he

called for a new law that would
require lenders to ddose in
advance the total am nt of la-
terest to be paid and th annual
rate of interest.
Other legislative recommen-
dationwere:
A requiraent that cosmetics
be proved sale before market
tlg and that federal inspection
of tood, dro and comnetics
be expanded.
Require imspuion of all meat

and poultry sold in the coun-
try, whether or not it crossed
state lines. Johnson noted that
present federal law requires in-
spection only of these items
when they cross state lines.
Grant subpoena authority in
administrative hearings under
the Food, Drug and Cosmetic
Act
Require warnings of accident
Hazards on labels for drugs,
(See JOHNSON a Page 2)

I

88th Yeor, No.
I i

GAINESVILLE, FLORIDA, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 5, 1964

Former

Links Hoffa

To Jury Fix

CHAT'ANOOGA, Ten. (AP) A TemItes official-
turned-informer testified today that Jams JL Heoff told,
him of plans to "try to get a few scattered jurn" i
the Teamsters president's conspiracy trial
Edward Grady Partin, Baton Rouge, La, Temsta
officer, tetid over heated de-
fense objections at the jury Frak Wso this mol per
tauperai trl of Hoe and s pd t to te .
five other men. His was t he M a in*.. .. .
first temonynk Hoifa def' by
with m alleged juq r *y4 Ih r'osurs rpem appearace,
forts sofaris thOetrial, noi had sout to b
Its third week. ton y a grn ds be
"He cald me to is rom" r ben panl ed pBy !
said Pari, bue manager taer midst by td Jusce Doi
of Baton Rouge Local No. partme. '
"He told mehe'dlikefor e to. "I find the pemne di
stick around a few days. He not place him l idst dW f
mim wantmetotalkttoafew (O a )
people. (See OFA o Page 3) !
"He said they wre gog to
get to one juror and try to get
to a few scattered juros and Dn
hei a elance." gl
Hoffa p the others are ae-
nOed of trying to laaes ,
m is the 1M Naslle
tri. ByI OB (MIl
Soe p man ois a ma r l ltertBi w-
vktorny w US Dt Judige You coud be atfh ar t 110

Mayor Defies

OrderTo

Mix School
TUSKEGEE, Ala. (AP)-1Wb
ayr of Notaulga invoed a
newly adopted city ordinance
today and refused to a it six
Negroes to the all.it Notea
alga High School deite a fed-
eral court order to desegrgate
the schooL
Six other Neroes by com
trabt, were Silted quietly to
another white high shod at
- Shter Hg fM4
ain Integrated by hid c ant
erd
Maor Jam Ron at Neit-
alga topped to six Negro sl.
deat bre the y ou get
the county school b and nd1
fled them that uder the new
city fire and safety inspection
ordinance de school already
had as many students as It
couM safely accommodate.
The bus, driven by a Negro
and occupied only by the six
Nero student, left te school
groums and b headed had idthe
direct of Tegee, whern
the dtota bad bardd t.L
A aemMerdci phatIpapI ,
VenM Merritt Jr., was fadb
ly tab off the us ad tl
bto p eMu whn kt w &
erd e hadlpped aidm
atToains.
M l ts a m dof telemnr
hia UCUL a h ea3

lie to use more cauti in the
use dr & at the opening of
the tetoloh g workshop at the
J. Hilis Mlivr Health Canter
thiswee
Tertology is kde study ad bth
d ecb by dp
A bhe riMon gat o 75
Dr. Rua & 0. Keuley of the
U. L Food i d rq Aflie-
tranto, are putt their M a
together here this wk to hUp

ma that modern weaier
drugs are taken w t d sr.
Dr. Kelsey is credited with
preventingthe saleof thalido-
mide In the United States before
It was definitely identified as e-
sponsible for thousands of birth
deformities in Europe.
Some good may have resulted
from the trage of the tha6do.
aide episo do, Dr. Coggedall
said.
"Since then there has been a
noticeable spirit of coopera-
tin among the scienfic com
munity, drug industry and p-
ernment agencies. Everyone is
genuinely interested in waning
to make our new mdas
sale," be said.
(See KELEY a Pap 2)

Of County
By HAROLD PUMMEL
hn Staff Writer
TALLAHASSEE Five liq.
uor licenses have been pulled
t of rural Alachua County
and into Gainesville by the
State Beverage Department
Instead of 12, the city now
will get 17 licenses.
And the share of 30 li.
cenmes allotted to the county
has dropped from 16 to 11 out.
side the city limits, said a SBD
spokesman here this mornig.
The move follows several
weeks of examining the popu.
lation distribution to Alacbua
County and an attorney gener-
al's ruling.
He said recently that re-
ali a liquor lic dia,
trihutimo peadure i be Wsn .
ty we d be proper.
Te aned for clarifleation
anse in toerpreting the law
that states licenses should be
dir ted a among diffent
areas of a county on the basis
of the last U S. census.
The ldt cusa was in 11
when Gainesville had 2,000
residents.
flt gave Gainesville 13
imens.
But since the 1M0 cens, an
nation has added 10,I to
no pemns.
Proponents of increasing the
city's are of the leein s jus
tify their arguments with the
anneation. They listed
the population o the area
that now Is Gainesville should
be used Instead ofoldGalnes..
vik's population fim.
Now they've won, and their
vcory an the Uquor bea-
log procedure in Gaimesville.
It asM alters the odds for sue-
eeas of the applicants.
Under the old pin where the
cnmty would have gotten I .-
ce nes, every second applicdt
would have gotten a license.
There were 33 applicants for 11
licenses. But with only 11 li-
c-am available, the odds drop
to 3 to L
Inside th eity limhnits, Mie
adds are hbanced by the
move.
them ae applic for
-I cemgs baibs Galsm
vle. Whem te city was
lasted to lice12 s, the so
s am a a peaDk ameseda
Ioum s 6%a to 1.
te iki to In me s,
L a rease to a r
TO *-|BS afect oly Gals-
ft ndte rural part- of
"a". 7Te heawnal two
SA ma0m )
b4I5mM8 I p3l)

By BILL TAYLOR
Sea Staff Writer
Last month was almost the
"wettest" January ever record-
ed for achua County.
Rainfall during the month
totaled 11.52 inches. The most
rainfall recorded for January
was 11.7 inches in 19N, the wet-
test of all. The average rainfall
for the month is less than six
inches.
Keith Butson, state climatolo-
gist at the University of Florida
said there are three check points
for rainfall in Alachua County
where he keeps tab on daily
rainfall.
The three points are on the
southwest edge of the Universi.
ty campus where last month
there was recorded IV. inches
of rain; at Mobse where the
rainfall totaled ".01 inches, and

Was

All

Wet

off the Waldo Road about two
miles from Gainesville Municl-
pal Airport where the rain to.
taled 877 inches.
The 11.52 inches of rain were
recorded by the Gainesville
Flight Service at the airport.
Butson e x p la i ned that the
high reading at the airport was
because of "localized" rain and
"cloudbursts" that fell on a
small a r e a of Gainesville dur-
ing the month.
The first year that records
were kept on rainfall in Ala-
chua County was 188.
Last month the 1904 record
appeared about to be broken
on Jan. 30. If there had been
only a medium "shower" of
rain p n the last day of the
moth there would have been
a record set. As it turned out
it mied only by .31 Inch.

U.S. 301 Widening

Is Moving Along

CoUndemnation proceedings for
the next 4.5 miles of US. 01
our.laning from Waldo to Oruan
ge Heights will be filed today,
County Attorney Wayne Carlisle
told the Alchua County Com-
mission yesterday.
County Engineer Roy Miller
said this morning the 4.5 -mile
kleg of the project is expected to
be up for cotrieont bidding
at the March State Road De.
apartment bid letto.
Miller said the latesthase of
the highway himpnuam t work -
extends frm the Waldo south
city limits to ta Road 2
at Orange Heights.
Latest eonstn ni con. act
awarded by the SD was to VW
and N CaMstructiCo. of Ocla
for work from the BraN rd
County lie o te Waldo south
city limits on Jan. 2.
After the Wal *Orange
Heights project, the s phmse
of US 311 foeorlsg fIrm
Orange Heights of Haw
thore. UMier sid this Mdec
is expected to be p for oon-
tract i May.
Caoty o i. o actn
yeut yirte d:
-A rnpt by tae eam aogi
r st wwdeiom Isim at
te em*y Jfl hduiI e -mc
d0Md by nd Teey.
-Agreeg to as far w O
romn U federal pu as

Ii ad M 1is md a l
Sto "mitS G81bto-

s bkm Gat d by ylab -

p

WHEN

questing that the street be per.
manently barricaded to prevent
through traffic onto 4th Avenue.
- Approving Commissioner
Claude Brandon's request that
Rep. D. R. (Billy) Matthews be
asked to get a federal survey of
the Santa Fe River and its
drainage problems caused by
Willow and growth restricting
the stream's flow into the Su.
waonee River.

Road Loan

Sought

By County
By.JEAN CARVER
Se Staff Writer
Alachua County's chances
of borrowing nearly 300,000 to
exted N.W. Ath Avenue will be
explored in Tallahassee today
by County Commissioner Jack
DuNmNIce.
Durrance was authoried by
the Couy Commis yester-
day to discu a po le loan
with trustees of the new board
of trustees for secondary road
funds.
He is one of Idree county com.
miaemin appointed to th
tr e bard by Gov. Faris
The mt e authorized to
Seach conay up to 5W.IW
on a five"wear bs. The chair-
muadIbe Soe Road Board
and tat. wearer are also
eters of the board of trus.
Asdwcmammra yo.
trdy said the ed to exed
f Avi was go great to
wim ewral yeam for the eal.
west aIsal road in tlmestu
Ga*bsvI to reth e top
lf it. nary r ead rfrty
ft-

Five.Day
Temperatures will average
near the seasonal normal for
the five day period starting at
7 p.m. Wednesday and ending at
7 p.m. Monday. Normal daiy
high and low temperatures
range from N to 43 at Talla-
hassee; 72 to 52 at Tampa; and

More About

Johnson

S From Page 1
cosmetics, and pmr riled con-
tainers.c
End the practice of allowing
pesticide manufacture to
market their products before
they hav been certified a sae
by the Agriculture Department
Grant the Federal Trade
Commission authority to Issue
temporary cease-addesist or-
ders, subject to tourt review,
whbe the rfC believes contin-
uation of alleged false advertis-
ing or other unfair practices
would irreparably injure the
* public.
Extend to over-thecounter
stocks and bonds the same full
- disclosure requirement that
now insure pulic release of fi-
manal data about securities
W e on the stock exchanges.

IAZINg FOIWAtrC
AEr GULtF: sbuth Md aA
wiads I f i a Ins i f t
Sohm -OW mNess.
Forecast
7 to 51 at Miana. Rainfall will
average around one inch with
locally heavier reading over
the north portion of the state.
Showers are expected at the
beginning of the period and
again Sunday or Monday.

More About

Liquor

From Page 1
god. They'll go to Aechua and
High Springs. In High Sprin
there's only one applicant. Ala-
chua has two.
Despite word f the re-align.
lent of the distribubon proo.
cdure, there's still no indica.
tin as to when them ceases wi
W issued.
When the announcement of
re-alignment was made this
morning, beverage department
officials declined to speculate on
when the judging of applicants
would be completed and the le-t
enses issued.
They etier had mild they
hoped to issue them by Feb. 1.
Director Richard Keating re-
portedly has been occupied with
other busin including a
grand jury investigation of cor.
rpUtion charges that followed is.
suan of licenses i newly-wet
Polk County. The probe Wc-

i TATALM a.. yesterday when Mi. L- After Mr. LMIsd made thu'
mhI WmWr da went to the Bank d Haw- pm t at the bank yesr-
hl ls h liMrs. l a fo hesister. At tat lave the bankhte was
Londop's ye e had never tim Mrs. LaonL was nm ci ra ched by a Negro man who
played utilteatrday. aly secure. She ad $ in the asedhrIfit&SAad heard ay.
a.Se it W. uW S b@se Mand at homL thing abeut "that new tax mn
1 ,oal a eill tinM a w fix. lbe.gm ended alout 5 p.m. Iey the bank and in pot
,MrU Beckham, a Negro, i a yesterday. She fo.nd herself office"
imOW.She lib a da ii herb money i the bank
home in Haw m. Yesterday ad -one at bome. Mrs. Londos told the man
she lot her Ii savings, $1, Mrs. London's $1,M0 went to that abe knew nothing about
to a wuple c ati who two "flim-flam" opesaitr who banks and their taxes but in-
introdl ced M Ldon to the teamed up to get s i g for formed the man that her brother
ameo' "nit." Inothing and picked Mrs Ledo worked at the Hawthorne Post
T i a tedan abnM t :g ast their victim. OfIe and ha Mold ealighteI

From Page 1
ad disrupted the ebassy's
telephone system.
US. Consul George McFar-
land said he saw a man get out
of a car, drop a packdag near
the embassy wall and then speed
off in the vehicle. The embas-
sy was evacuated after McFar-
land's alert.
tberiaque was knocked off
his feet by the second blast as
he walked around the corner of
th building to inspect damage
from the first explosi.
Pan American World Airways
sent two jetliners to Nicosia to
make shuttle runs across the
Mediterranean to Beirut, M
miles away. The first plane to
depart carried 17 women and
children.
The evacuation was expected
to be completed by Thluday.
The American community
Cyprus numbers about 1,M
persons, about 1, of the de-
pendents. It was not known
how many of the latter wold
leave.
Bombs also were exploded
Tuesday night at a Greek-owned
hotel where Britons were stay-
ing. None of the guests or em-
ployes was injured.
Makarios' rejection of the
NATO peace force was dis-
closed in London by Greek Cyp-
riot Foreign Minister Spyros
Kyprimanou.
The U.S and British govern-
meats have stipulated the 10,-
000-man NATO force should not
be made dependent on the Se-
curity Council, in which the So-
viet Union has a veto.

More About

Road

From Page'
Board member Ralph Powers
of Lake City about extending th
Avenue.
Comisioner Sid Martin said
increased traffic on the major
roads in northwest Gainesvile,
coupled with additional traffic
anticipated when 1-75 inter-
-ae are opened, made the
day."
He said theroad would have
to be added to the primary road
system to qualify for immediate

SIcept. The man sad they would was there she picked up I0
Mrs. indon and t spl t the money three ways on i cash. Then she went to th0
e o he conditia that they couldbank and drew out 00 ani
went ...ost office, but herprove that they had en gave it to the first man sh
brother was not there. Te manmoney to live on for a few had met and and he said tha
sO ted hat they go to his months. Ihe would protect it for her un
car and wait for her brother That's always the climax of til they could get the money)
to come back. They were sita "flimflam" game. That's from the other man.
tin the ca r when when it's decided who will wini
mn e arwtothen and who will lose. The odds The two men and Mrs. Lond
confidentially t el m e were against Mrs. London. on were supposed to meet at
be had just found ta. r t She told the man that she had grocr store in the afternoon
oe ust found a lrge sum money in the bank, but would, Mrs. London showed up, but
ofm have to go home to get her the other team didn't.
The man wanted to share it bank book. She went home for The game was over, and Mrs,
with them. They said they'd ac- the bank book and while she London had lost

Obituarie

1I st rTT T EDGAR IVEY DR. WILLIAM
rnC -% I 1I iServices for Edgar S. Ivey,I COWPERTHWAITE
At e 0 V 6 0 I, 6 S.E. 7th St., will beI A memorial service 'for Dr.
SThursday at 4 pm. in the Wl- William (; Cowperthwaite,
ACCIDENT ROUNDUP 10 block of NW 2nd Street. liams-Thomas Chapel. 44, who was killed in an air-
The GainmSvle police this Ralh I Grande Sherouse, A retired city lt deparplane crash here Monday, will
__ .ll o.li. th 414 NW 3th St., and James ment employee, he died yester. be held at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow
morning rqwptor l h.1e iw Douglas Frakes, 404 N. Main day. at the Holy Trinity Episcopal
perso u inolu In accidents inSt., about 5:44 p.m. yesterday He lived here since 15IS and Churrn
the city yesterdayaa today: at tihe intersection of Main as a member of the Fhrt He was thedirector of the
.Martin Watkins, o NW Sre t ad University Avenue. Christiam QMrch and was a Div.son of Plant Industry of
4th a in e Cdy Heders St. Augu- .the Florida Dept, of Agriculture.
4th St., about 7:35 am.m inthe ederson, St. ugu- Include hs wd- The body wll be shipped to
tine, alid Judith Ann Lyman, survsore hahle his wid- The body will be shipped to
md NE 17th Ave. about 6:, ow, Mrs. Juanita McNair lvey Reading, Pa for burial.
M1 a1t1t p at 1thAe intersection of .d and several nieces and nephews.: Officiating will be Rev. Earle
tore Ab O t p ia d ant of Rw. Officiating at the funeral ser C. Page, minister of the Holy
thor Rod ad5th stet. vices will be Dr. U. S. Gordon, Trinity Episcopal Church,
Dr. W arley. Palmer, assisted by Rev. J. Emmett Pallbearers are The Hon.
W2dAve., and James eMoore. Doyle Conner, Commissioner
K eisey Dulfy Weir, 113 NW 6th Street. Pallbearers are H. C. Horn, of Agriculture; Chester Blake.
Don Hope, C. G. Mixson Jr., more, Florida Department of
From Page 1 More About Walter Car, Willsam Simp80o Agriculture; Dale Wolfe, H. L,
and Cart Fetner. Burial will be Jones, Meigs Haggerty, State
Dr. eley, ho was given a in Evergoen Cemetery. Local Sen. Ed. H. Price Jr., and R. J.
medal by P,. idht enedy Wa slglen L la'I,41 will conduct Masonic Bishop.
her al byes in epno the graveside. services. Honorary pallbearers are
derangers Li..uIn.es in tFemmembers of the Division of
dangers of omi FPage HENRY HALL lant industry ecicalCo.
id her spices the drugnica um.
wer based ore on lack of in. acuthe secretary to ex-Gov. TT Henry Lester mittee and the vestry of tile
formation the o. any positive Gordon Pe.ou. Hall, 71, at the Lake City Holy Trinity Episcopal Church.
evidence existing at the time. Sta troopers guarded Notas- VA Hospill Tuesday morning. All offices of the Division of
ulga High and the school at Services will be Sunday at 2 Pant Industry throughout the
"I believe more o e people Shorter and kept all but stut p.m. at the Jones Funeral Home state will be closed all day to.
involved in dru devlopmet dents and faculty members off Memorial Chapl in Starke with morrow.
should e familiar with teratolthe They were Rev. Donld Willis and Rev. The family has requested that
y so that positive iomation orders from their commander Lacy Conway officiating. Burial donations, in lieu of flowers, be
can be edbeforeany dru f. i b Hope Cemetery at made at the church for a land.
is proposed for human use," she t keep federal Theressa, near Starke scap memorial fund in honor
said. offschool pert He was a WorldWar I veteranofDr.Cowperthwaite.
Dr Kelseyv aiddnrug laws in.- The ordinance invoked by the andwasaemberof the BethAel

troduced by the late Sen. Estes mayor is dated Jan. 27.
Kefauver after the thalidomide F agents at Notasulga
malformations came to light re- made no effort to penetrate the
ire more thorough studies tro hoper arrier.
with experimental animals be. A boycott at previously de-
fore the Food and Drug Ad-,segregated Tuskegee High left
ministration will approve new the Kdod with a student body
drugs Iof only 12 Negroes. The State
Coggeshall said be hoped new School Board ordered the school
drug laws will not discourage in- closed as an economic liability.
vestigators from developing A U.S. District Court judge
more and better media ons ordered the 12 Negroes tans-
"If investigators take the atti-ferred to the two neighboring
tude that such research is too communities.
much trouble under new regular uskegee, the county seat,
tios we may lose a future Jon.- ao faced possible Negro dem-
a Salk or John Enders." onstrations. Students at Tuske.
He cited polio vaccine as an gee Institute talked of protest
--ample of how persrerance marches through the city if in
medical scientists resulted tegration in the nearby commu-

greater benefits to mankind.
"In 111 there were 5,000
cases of paralyticpowo in this
country. Last year there were
only M. This represents a tre.-
mendous laboratory effort.
"At one point there were som
risks involved in giving the vac-
cine to humans, but if we had
waited unti all questions were
answered, thousands more would
hiv been crippled by the dis-
ease," Dr. Coggeshall said.
Dr. Kelsey, the mother of
two teen-age daughters, said
her Distinguished Civilian Ser-
vice Medal, the h est honor
which can be bestowed by the
U.S. Government on a civilian,
is now in a museum at the Food
and Drug Administratio head-
quarters in Washington.
'I haven't donated it to the
museum, but they are a proud
of it they inised oa dlepiaying
it."
She said the abe o d thal.
idoode tests on prpeit a
malb aroused her sple o ad
led her to as ate acti to ben
the dmr t II hU ed I aMte

ues was DIOC L "|I knew there was a serious
igo warned the troopers T Th N s security leak among the de.
the lawn of Notasulga High: et e ws 1fense counsel," testified Daniel
"the situation (here) is wor se Maher, the lawyer. The govern-
than it was at Tuscaloosa, Bir- HOLLYWOOD (AP) Ac-,ment, he said, had "seemingly
mingham or Auburn." tress Ann Margret hit actor uncanny ability to predict our
A James Ward on the head with a moves "
Audubon Picks bottle and sent Ward to the bos- He said he once inquired
Local Persons pital with a concussion, about Partin who said he was
... . wini constant contact with de-
It happened in a movie brawl tense lawy ers nd Justice De
Eight Gai ile residents bottle, madeof artent officials during the
were named to office inthec candy like mate I1962 trial. But, Maher said, he
Flurid Amet n Society wh M eoaily on I .was assured by Hotfa and one
Two of thein-J. C. D correctly. of his lawyers, "He's one of us;
s Jr. and Mrs. Archie F But Ann.Margret hit Ward he's all right.
Carr-were dected tooneyearwiththe buttendofthe bottle. When Partin under indict-
terms on the group's board of Next on her schedule: Lasment in Baton Rouge for steal-
directors. Another Gainesville srm in how to hit with the bot.ing union funds took the
man, Minter J. Westfall Jr.,! te. stand Tuesday, the defense ob-
wasnamed honoraryvice pre. ejected bitterly, asserting

MOSCOW (AP)-ILv Davioo-
vich Landau, winner of the 1962
Nobel Prize for physics, has
been released from a Moscow
hospital, two years after he was
injured in a highway accident.
A spokema for the hospital
said Landau has been at his
lane in Moen since Jan. 2.
There was m word whether
landau, 5, had recovered

I oJs teSti Uly WoUJU l e a viJUJdla
tion of privacy.
More About

Ocala

From Page 1

enough to resume his wor week to explore the possibili
m ist i believed to ties of better job for Negroes
have ph d a lead role m ed improvements in the Negro
planning Soviet space pro- district, west of Ocala.
grm. He Mauffered severe brain Ayers is chairman of the
SPIkston announced also that
WASHMOTOM (Ap) QoteJackie Robinson first Negro in
of the day: Mrs. Lyndon B, r league baseball, would
J saI, aSa to 4 col- address a civil rights meeting
lke editor who vismed the Sarbday in Ocala.
White Houae, recalled she had --- -
sadied jrMlmu in college. Gainesville Sun
than d*w a -' h waA Phblished mvmnis 5XeCt
aO : "BHow, Snd. and Smuday amon
e wees e and a per by the GainviL e Pub.
-iib. mi- Cornown at 101 SE
2nd^ ^ P alnace. oiaftl CI. tA.

we.e cgi n has h ,-uMO,
Warm bel9m p ed
his reamrk of usody thdt
ae o the uta, ho
tie mcod o' dued ar-
hegs "may at be l eam d hi
your lihe s."
Iat ws spokn a bt e
tiou*y but dal. hbaoly, he
EM, beae: "To. (Os-
wald) was in i osia ,d In
Mexico, and we dot know
what that may lmdl The
* rip may have acuity aspects,
ad if they do, we oud t re-
lease the security matters at
the time of our report"
So far nothg has bee en-
counted which might have to
be withheld, he saidd.

may very well make the

best toast youf ever tasted

Monks' Bread has a flavor 9ou can't
toast away. Even butter can't hide it.
It has a goodness you don't fin in mos
bread. It's a bread that wasn't meanI
to be sold. It began as simple suste l
nane for the monks at the Abbey o4
the Genesee-men who eat no met. no fowl All the good
things the monks baked into'their il-flavored loaf naturally
toast up better. I

Try Moni'Bread tomorrow, toasted. With coffee if you ike.

'a.Da*O s
p~qd mkin duuibgsa

blaki Nt jd!r. sa.mathe oa
hmaiM isa mmd r

bgadet,'n I saotnojpain

I' U

*I

WedMedy, FbrnMFy 1964

Gaim"Is SUN

m

I

i

4 ubm. so. Wedmmlq, re smr 5, 194

t

HulrU'si BmiHl
UJmbvIty Otf

Thoughts on the '
We have before u a monograph
published by the Southern Regional
Education Board caed "The Year-
Bound Calendar in Operation." It
purports to survey the various plans
now operating in colleges nd uni-
versities to achieve the fullest pos-
sible use of college facilities through-
out the year.

The authors say: "Although no
one system of year-round operation
is likely to be established, the tri-
measter calendar seems likely to
emerge as the model plan."

This is hardly a conclusion that
can be drawn from the facts present-
ed. It sounds more like a wishful
conjecture dictated by personal pref-
erence. In all fairness, however, it
must be said that the authors do not
claim too much for their "study."
In a mildly apologetic preface they
say, "It is too early to draw defini-
tive conclusions" concerning the
newer patterns of year-round acheo
dules.
After five years (they surmise)
we'll know a lot more about them. In
short, the most important conclusion
that emerges from the "study is
that it is too soon to make a study.

The trimester system now in force
in Florida's universities is a system
that equates the new (and shorter)
trimester with the old (and longer)
semester in terms of credit values
and course coverage. This telescoping
process, compressed in time and ac-
celerated to speed, crates a frustra-
ting situation for both teachers and
students. Careful and intelligent ob.
servation, added to the simple logic
of the time equation, forces such a
conclusion. And the conclusion is sup-
ported by a study conducted through
the Student Health Service during
the fall trimester.

It is true that the study was made
by the "sampling" method, but the
results were statistically significant
with respect to the marked "step-up"
in stress and tension.

Certainly some further probing
should be done. The charges that the
"side effects" of the foreshortened
term are bad should be either con-
firmed or negated y facts, not by
bias and conjecture. Not only the of-
feet on health and morale but the
rate of student dropout and failure
should be studied. The assessment of
results, pro and con, should be a con-
tinuous process in education par-
ticularly in new and experimental
programs.

Irimelter Ststem
semester u in chmitry, in his-
tory, in nuhematscs into a "trimes.-
ter," which i faster in pace and
shorts in hime, is su contrary to
logic as try 'gto cary seven quarts
of water i a si z-q t container.
The fact that 'the same amount of
credit is ewned in qe courses in-
dicates the fatuous assumption that
they equate educationally. It is as
naive as to assume that "one-half"
and "one-thrd" equate mathematic-
ally.

The admiitrative immiek that
is used to create a semblance of
equality in the time element is the
lengthening of the cla periods five
minutes. What a train fallacy it is
to assume that anin is measured
by minutes pent in e classroom
instead of hours and days spent on
challenging assignment, on related
readings, in self-direct study and
research, and in other ps of out-
of-class activities! !

But the ruling was passed. The oll
system was oit and the new system
was in-without time ifor internal
alteration or adjustment. Here ap-
pears the grgrimmet in of all
educational practice the insinua-
tion of lay deaislon and'control into
problems that require expert and
professional judgment. at would be
as sensible to dictate tke diet sche.
dule of hospital patients as it is to
dictate the time schedtde:of academic
programs by ex-cathedr4 fiat.

Policy-making, of court e, is a prop-
er function for a govern ing board.
But the deteintion ]f policy is
quite different from the dictation of
method.

There is only one way to relieve
the harassment of both dents and
faculty under overde tri-
mester system. d that i to cut the
educational content to fi' the calen-
dar. This me" ti some
assignments am limiting the nor.
mally expected coverage. Les, done
well and with understanding, is bet-
ter than more, done poor and sup-
erficially. Education mes develop.
meant. It is a pro of drawingg out"
-not "forcing "

According to ur bet formation,
both faculty ahd studits have
shown admirable, patience lnd effort
in trying to make the new time gar-
meat" fit But the simply
doesn't stretch. Itmediocr Isning,
mental stie and mount frustra-
tion are to be %voided, something
must "give.

o N Ug taSg
By AlU M O m
WAS INGTUI-O(e of the
changes in the lg-ds
.ance debate betwn Gov.
PH MeGII_ Rock&feUer and Se. Gold.
SL i water in their quest for the
S Repaia"Mn Auinatua for
e president onceN proposals
which thGove rr s ays the
Senator has made for fonds-
r mental reviu o d foreign
s uand domestic policies and
sine watered down. These
TrT oposals i evolve the role of
L the United States h the United
a Nations f Communist China
is anidtted, the perpetuation
RUchard B. H of the graded iome tax,
ge Smathers, of how to deal with the threat
d icidae created by the Clat regime
v a mae. m Cuba and awa others.

speed ine Somthen states
in behla of President Lyndo
B. Jolmos and the Democra-
tic Party in the upcediag
campaign of atim
They had two thames.
One, they urged their audi-
ence to "look beyond" the
civil rights fight, h which
Senator Russell will be cap-
tain of the fierce compulsive
opposition. To be are, their
Southern audiences know what
to look for in that region
"beyond" civil rights. ea
tor Russell spelled It out.
He knows that, whatever Re-
publican is nominated, the
COP will, of neceity, move
strongly to win an possible
support from the big cities in
the populous states with big,
fat, electoral totals. There.
fore, said Se n a t o r Russell,
whenhee, hime, looked
"beyond" the civil rights leg-
islative battle he saw Repub-
lican measures more strong,
even, than those of his own
party, and said:
"There is no place else to
go."
AND, OF COURSE, there
Isn't It is a longer possible
to deny 19 million Amrican
citizens the ordinary, day-to-
day rights held by about 171
millions. Not even the U. S.
Senate may much longer de-
lay this decision. Nor should
It wish so to do.

Senator Russell forthrightly
concluded be could not distin-
guish between the Rockefel-
ler Nixon wing of the Repub-
lican Party and the ADA
(Americans for Democrat i
Action) members of "my own
party-"
Senator Russell then pr o-
ceeded to endorse President
Lyndon Johnson in terms
more all- inclusively gner-
ous than those he has used
in support of any previous
Democratic candidate for the
presidency since IOm when he,
Senator Russell was an ard-
ent supporter of Franklin D.

REMINDING HIS audience
6L L6 L L, -d, L L.J A&LV

of
ty
di
m
in
m
s

th
Ch
tN
a

I
e

C
I
I
I

Dual

GOUWATmR has count-
red with assertions that
Sproposals have been mis-
repesnted, and he has r-
ated them. Inso doinghe
has supplied details which,
touh preserving the sub-
s-ace and consistency of his
view o these and other mat-
ters, have placed them in the
category of things desirable
but not possible of attainment
in the present climate of Am-
erican politics. But, contrary
to the hopeful thesis of "liber-
al" commentators and poli.-
cians that Goldwater is follow-
ing the path of compromise to-
ward the bi-partisan "central
caMseus" to salvage what
small outside chance he may

By Interlndi

BELOW OLYMPUS

"First the bi corportions wanted specialists, now they
want specioists with a liberal-aots education. They're
looking for scholars, not executive material!"

GOLDWATER'S COLUMN m

Castro: How

Long to Wait?

dARRY GOLDWATER
U.S. Senator
The Panama rioting, the
terrorism in Venezuela and
the successful overthrow of
the legally-constituted gov-
ernment of Zanzibar have
presented President John-
son with the knottiest foreign
policy problem of his new
administration.
In all three cases, troops
and revolutionaries trained
by Fidel Castro were respon-
sible, and therein lies the
rub.

S Mmu ua Ue ea LW How long can we permit the
PresidentJohnsofornar- Soviet manned bastion of
30years, hePresient"a Cuba to go on disrupting the
i untm l sabilityd th"a Western Hemisphere?
nof unusual abitywithan Hw long can we permit
mene capacity for leder- Hto goon dicupln the
ha Western Hemisphere?
"Hehasafine underston& How long can we permit
g of the workings ofoivesr Cuba to go on eq1prt s
t a a appreciation for lence, treachery Ml aggre
e delicate arrangement of sion to nations in our on
bcks and balances that is front yard?
the genius of the American All we seem to get from
mmatitonal system. government officials is con-
"In my opinion," Senator formation and more confir-
buea said, "Lyndon John- motion that- things are wry
on has the potetial to be bad and grat e.
me Me f the mtry's For example, DefcSe sec-
reae reidets" retry Robert MeNmara
is the latest member of the
So much for the record administration to viewwith
wilt. by the Southbern sea- alarm the devwthin in-
rwo for yeshas libee, volving Castro and theLtia-
nd is, the headofthe South- American family of nation
n ble I ea Coaums. On Jan. 27, the Defe sb'
retary told the nHow hd
SENATOR EIAMMt Services CamiaEf ftt
quoa strong in endorsing there is soliMd i Mem y
Preesit Jies, gave sam weapons are bM t rom
aUet to BSenar Gew Cuba to diaU t proup in
ter The stat of Ariaes other Lati.a*Ulm a e
Ias hemal bfen much fed- tries.
eal spem i tmeale d ripa Then Mr. I ume wot
dIo projects have made its. on tosay:
dMi Mbios w croadp u "Comes- o a mn -6
Mhsg devlop ts. to exploit O fwaM Is
"Seatr Godanier in ltn-Americsa by sg a
d. m - m Ind Mme*mmmPOW ad00
TVA," sa- O- r -- N murami c. t
whilee he seeks to drive ,Ta ,vo-d-
9=0 i t O --- e@mm c co It
Perm" SNO bo N"Ly ationso ;ai
pN. es a SAM my be- Ct..s EP
--ir-lb---m, r ena* rA i Y lo dm m
r Gel-dwav-in M Mnkwalm 1 b--
am-M-thne, et the N, g o
h-o am m M-- "

mo an am a rn aimt s
at cu a

0: a-i -1 9ad
M ...... .. N t aWM- I ."

the recent discovery of a
cache of Cuban-supplied arms
in Venezuela was a case in
point and proved that wea-
pons as well as guidance and
money and open propaganda
are being exported from
Cubs. He added that Cas-
tro is struggling with an eco-
nomic crisis, but that his
"grip an the people through
the use of police-state meth-
S is still unbroken "

Even the hardiest of gov-
ernment doubters now ac-
knowledge the fact that Cas.
tro s playing bhob with the en.
tire hemisphere. But none of
them tells us what, if any.
thing, is going to be done
about it On this score, Secre-
tary McNamara was no help
at all.
After detailing the current
activities of Communist Cuba
and fmcmt more uble
from the sme source, M sec-
reMary concluded:
"We are continuing our ef-
forts to isolate Cuba from the
free world, tm increasing
the Soviets' burden of sup-
porting the Cuban economy.
This would seem to indicate
that America policy is to
wait and hope that sme day
the Soviets wl go broke and
decide that a showcase for
hm*-m v. de a
am no hIw uMn qmt.
int
ButInsog ttat as loug
u CasCre is a oume l
makg tro for the United
St as t lhe hb esm up to
th poit RMinms wi
fNd a w sbMep Vse Cm

Campaign

have of nomination and 'or el- publican leaders in AriZo

section, it seems to this observ-
er that the Senator has not re-
canted the political credo he
define as "progressive" con-
servatism.
When, however, on Jan.
3, at Phoenix, Ariz., he an-
swered questions from the
press after anouning his
candidacy for te Repub-
ican nomination, he did im-
ply that he might be a candi-
date in the 1964 general elec-
tion both for president and for
re-election as senator. Since
Goldwater had attacked Pres-
ident Johnson in 160 for his
dual candidacy, on the ground
that it was an immoral spec-
ies of "trickery" in which he
never would engage, he left a
broad impression that he was
retreating on what he had
proclaimed to be a dear issue
of "morality" in politics.

ASKED IF HE would "drop
the Senate entirely" if he won
the party nommmtion for pres-
ident, Goldwater replied on-
ly that "I'll hav to amcro that
bridge when I come to It."
And added:
.. We bar a unual
situation in thi state In that
we file for r munation (for
offices within the git of
Arhos voters) a few days
before the Rublican Nation-
al Convention and then the
primary ian't umil the second
Tuesday in September ... and
I don't know what my friends
would do itt and it's way
too early to say."
Later t the Jan. 3 Q.
and A., and in appearances
before voters in the New
Hampshire presidential pre-
ference primary, the Senator
laughed off similar inquiries
by saying that "When the
teacher (Johnso) himself is
running, I would lke to be a
rather good student." Accord-
ingly, many have concluded
that he is reserving his decin-

SBUT INQUIID of Re-

disclose that this is a misap-
prehension, although justi-
fied by Goldwater's own
words. It arises, according to
these sources, from a confus-
ion between simultaneous
candidacy for two mmina-
tdes and for election to the
offices involved. What the
Senator has been saying, they
explained, is that because the
date of the Arizona senatorial
primary and the interests- of
the party in the state, he is
compelled to be a candidate
in the same period for two
nomination. But they report
he already has informed them
that. if the San Francisco con-
vention chooses him as its
presidential nominee, he will
immediately withdraw his
entry in the Republican sena-
torial primary in Arizona to
be held in September.

This removes any similarity
to the course followed in 1960
by President Johnson. He was
on the Texas ballot in the
general election as a candi-
date both for vice president
and for re-election to the
Senate, the state law having
been changed to authorize
this dual candidacy. Also. the
change moved back the 1960
senatorial primary in Texas
from late July and August to
the first Saturday in May,
with a runoff if necessary on
the first Saturday in June.
THIS ENABLED Johnson
to go to the Democratic Na-
tional Convention at Los An-
geles with the prestige of
being the party's already cho-
sen nominee for re-election to
the Senate.
No change of the Arizona
election law is required to per-
mit Goldwater to appear on
the same state ballot as the
Republican nominee for both
president and senator. But it
now develops the party in
Arizona is on notice that, if
be wins the first contest, he
absolutely will withdraw from
the second.

The Signs Grow. Murky
Fromn l Cewli Washings Bureau
WASHINGTON A Federal Trade Commissiun proposal
to require health hazard warnings on every pack of cigarettes
is inspiring inventive minds around the country.
Long lists of machines, foods, tonics, beverages, buildings
and vehicles that should carry similar warnings .re being
drafted by people who think the government should do more
to protect us from ourselves. Here are some samples:
Front and rear Bumper stickers for the car: "This is a
lethal instrument Last year similar instruments killed 43,000
Americans on the streets and highways. FTC order 197-5o0 A)."
Whisky bottle sticker: "More than 30,000 members of Alco-
holies Anonymous wish they'd never tasted the stuff. In large
doses, known to cause pickled livers and divorce."
Power mowers: "Forty-three toes were lost in one county
alone last year from the feet of people who used this machine."
Milk bottle legend: "The contents of this bottle may add to
your cholesterol count, often plugging the valves of your
heart with an unseemly sludge. If broken, this bottle can
cause blood poisoning to bare feet. Use with caution."
Hem label on women's dresses: "Warning to men! 'The con-
tents of this package can break up your home."
Sign on back of airline seat: "You are taking this ride at
your peril. Sister planes of this model have crashed on four
continents and ditched in two oceans."
Flip-top beer can: 'Twenty-five dollar prize for anybody
who can open 17 of these without badly tearing a thumb.
Heavily endorsed by doctors whose patient load for thumb
injuries has increased enormously since invention of this can."
Sign In hospital reception room: "Enter at your own risk.
Last year 14 patients who survived minor surgery succombed
to a staphylococcus infection contracted in this hospital."
Label on bottle of antibiotic pills: "Side effects of this drug
are inalculable. This much can be said. One side is irritating
and the other side painful."
Sign over hotel bath tub: "Not responsible for injuries to
personnel while under the influence of soap. Most accidents
in this type of tub are fatal or worse."
Irge sign at LoI Angeles city limits: "This metromania
definitely hazardous to all forms of human life. People who
breathe our smog should stop immediately; our freeways un-
safe. Motorists urged to turn back here."
UA Treasury note on the dollar bill- 'Spend this swiftly.
It Is depreciating two mills a minute while You stand there.
If kept overnight, wash bill thoroughly to prevent infection
from germs which habit money."
ip over uorvally ga e : "Do not watch football games
lre i you have a hert tey. Last year 33 of our spectat.
on dhed of heart ttacS l me triple-threat quarter-
back is un~ ni year's im again."
Label on a r carto: "Umi for diabetics except under
doctor's pMreripdl Ala tads to make consumers over.
welit, a pmrIlI factor h the death rate."
I i a iatrkm 's dfim: k twice before you bring
als teMby kto de wa, HI We pectiancy will be 7 .2
years. Do you at a dld eM to die of old age?"

Thoughts on the Trimester System
'We have befm uas a monograph inter eoua In chaeitry, in his-
*pbtished by the Soothe RegIonal tory, in mathe ti Int a "triaw-
imucation Boad Deld W he Year- tr," whiih fttar i pa and
nd Calendar n Operati" It Anrt in t* is a totnry to
purports to survey the vario pLnm . .

now operating 6 eoges ad uni-
vnities to asieve the fullest
Olb use of eOep faclties through"
out the year.

The authors say: "Although no
one system of year-round operation
is liky to be established, the tri-
mter calendr likely It
emerge as the model pla."

This is hardly a conclusion that
can be drawn from the facts p'est-
ed. It sounds more like a wishfull
conjecture dictated by psonal pf-
erence. In all fairness, however, it
must be said that the authors do not
claim too much for their "study."
In a mildly apologetic preface they
say, "It is too early to draw defini-
tive conclusions" concerning the
newer patterns of year-round sche.
dules.
After five years (they surmise)
well know a lot more about them. In
short, the most important conclusion
that emerge from the "study" is
that it is too soon to make a study.

The trimester system now in force
in Florida's universities is a system
that equates the new (and shorter)
trimester with the old (and longer)
semerter in terms of credit values
and course coverage. This telescoping
procei, compared in time and ac-
celerated in aled, eates a fatra.
tin situation for both teachers and
students. Careful and lntelliet ob-
servation, added to the simple logic
ofhe time equation, force such a
conclusion. And the aclusion Is sup.
ported by a study conducted through
the Student Health Service during
the fall trimeter.

It is true that the study was made
by the "sampling" method, but the
results were statistically signflcnt
with respect to the marked "steip"
in stres and tension.

Certainly some further probing
should be done. The char ge that the
' "aide effects" of the foreiorteoned
term are bad should be either con-
firmed or negated by facts, not by
bil and cmajecto. Not only the of-
fect on health and morale but the
rpt of student depm t and ltoe
hold be studied. TheM .u t of
ults, pro and con, bould be a .
tauous presa i flrtn aatian pa
ticularly in ew and experimental

To try to crowd a tightly-packed

gJ w asuriy nsm cam W on .quar
of water is n six-quars container.
The fact that the same amoqt of
credit is earnd in the courses ain-
diate the fatpous assumption that
they equate e ucationally. It is a
naive as to asume that "one-hair
and *s-hu? equate m atheatie-
-.
Thi administrative gnmimck that
is mued to, ates, a nmblance of
equSity il the time decent is the
logth ig of Vthe dclain riods five
minutes. What a tragic Walacy it Is
to assume that learning s measured
by minutes pent in th6 classroom
instead of hocks and days spent on
challenging assignments, on related
readings, in sl.f-directed study and
research, and In other tpes of out-
of-class activities I

But the ruling was paid. The old
system was out and the new system
was in-withqut time for Internal
alteration or adjustment. Here ap-
pears the grimmest kremlin of all
educational practice 'te insinua.
tion of lay dison and' trol into
problem tha re er and
professional judgment. I would be
as sensible todtat the diet sche-
dule of hospital patientsaas It is to
dictate the th schedule k)f academic
programs by x-cathedral fiat

Poey-makg, of court, is a prop.
er function fMr a govering board.
But the determination f policy is
quite differe from the dictation of
method.

There is ody one way to relieve
the harassment of both students and
faculty under an overdequnding tri.
master system And that I to cut the
educational cotent e o fit the cals'.
dar. This m as la ting same
assignments nd limiting the nor.
mally apecte coverage. ALess, done
wen and with undertaking, is bet-
ter than more, done poor y and sup-
edicially. Education develop.
meant. It Is aprcesof "di awlg out"
-not "forcing n."
I
According to our best i aforation,
both faculty and stu nt have
shown admirable patimo Ad effort
n trying to make the uiW tivegar-
omett A-it tho ehth e
doesn't stretdl If mdioc earn,
mental st msonU4 -wla
thio are to be avoided, illg
pt "give,. -

Sars Richard B. Ruasel
and George Smaters, of
Geoq and FlorMda rae -.
tie, havely, avMode recent
iedts B Southern Mat.
in be o PNsident dom
B. JA son and the Democra-
tic Party In the upminig
camlip f a tm.
hey had two Uns.
One, they urged their audi-
ce to "took beyond" the
clvi rights fight, a which
Senator Russell will be cap.
tain of the fierce co mpulsie
opposition. To be ure, their
Southern audiences Imow what
to look for in that region
beyond civil rights. Smt.
tor Base speed it at
st hmws that, whatever le-
public n aominated, the
GOP will, of necessity, move
strongly to win all possible
supt from I citiWes in
the populous states with big,
fat, electoral Wals. There-
fore, said senator Russell,
wha he. himself, looked
"beyond" the civil rights leg-
islative battle he saw Repub
lican m es more stron
even, than those of his own
party, ad said:
'There is no lace else to
go."
AND, OF COURSE, there
Isn't It is nolonger possible
to deny i million American
citdizenm the ordinary, day-to-
day rights held by about 172
millions. Not even the U. S.
Senate may much longer de-
lay this decision. Nor should
It wish so to do.
Senator Russell forthrightly
concuded he could not distin-
gush between the Rockefel.
ler. Nixon wing oftheRepub-
lican Party and The ADA
(Americans for Dlimocratic
-Action) members of "my own

Seator uell then pro-
cweed to endorse President
Lyndon Johnson in terms
more all inclusively gener-
ous than those he has used
o support of any previous
Democratic candidate for the
presidency since U when b e,
Senator Rsl, as an ar
at supporter of Franklin D.
Bew.mE

Srfty 01eemaM d chiris to apearin the
Te as Ta op Cmpwpqm; adad ch mintserh'
also b bring an offering.
Aplf her seM d iMA as a be" iere d Rev. W. S. Whle
partcofenationlIninkurt to becme bishop.
jucton with the National The pulk is invited.
Fim' Observace.
Alpha Kappa Al.ha is the
first Greek letter sorority for TO ECIVE AWARD
Negro women. This sorriy Mrs. Dorothy Richardson
was founded on the camp of of Alacinh a 4-H Chlb Girl, will
Howard University In the year receive special award on Fri-
MI. The Alpha dater is loe- day, Feb. 7. during the Florida
ted there signifying the first State Fair at Tampa, according
chartered chapter. to an amouncement made this

Eta Tan Omegs Chapter do
Alpha Kappa Alpha became a
part of the national organisation
an February 10, IM, with min.
ership from the Gainesville-
Ocala areas. The chapter has a
total membership of 19.
The sorority has planned sev-
eral activities in keeping with
the theme "To Capture a Vision
Fair," a Sisterhood night, Feb.
6, at the home of Sor Cather-
ine Mickle, Youth Culture night
for selected young ladies of the
Gainesville Ocala areas, Feb.
7, at Gwen Lanes in Ocala. To
climax the week c observance,
the sorority will convict Its
Founders' Day Worship at the
11 an. service at the Mt. Car.
mel Baptist airch, Feb. I
The main speaker will be Soror
Norma S. While, Gamma Rho
Omega, CQpw Jm dvlk
Florida. Tim pt i I itsed to
attend.

ALMUCB -MR
SERVICt
The W. S. White services for
bishop will be held at the Great.
er Bethel A.M. Church with
Rev. W. S. Whie pastor, a
Feb. 5, Wednesday, at 7:30 p.m.
Te principal speaker will be
Rev. W. M. Ferguson, pastor of
Mt. Pleasant Methodist Church
The songservice wll be con
ducted by a chair from Mt
Pleasant Methodist Church.
Each minister of the alliance

week by Miss floy Britt, district
home demonotraton agent in
charge of special programs at
Florida AiM University, Tala-
hassee. Recognition for out-
standing 4-H Club participation.

PERSONALS
Miss Helen Jones, of Tampa,
is visiting with her sister, Mrs.
Male Young, here and other
relatives.
Mrs. Edith Edwards returned
here yesterday from Washing-
ton, D. C., following a two-week
visit with her daughter, Mrs
Minie Wilmo
Mrs. E. K Mills flew yester-
day to Atlanta, Ga., because of
ba es She will be away for
several days
Miss Mary L. Thmas and
Miss Clara H. Johmso, bothof
Ft. derdle, were guests of
friends re the past weekend.
Mrs. Katie Mae Wallace and
daughter, Madge, of Miami,
we pguests of friends here yes-
Mr. and Mrs. Robert James
nd daughter Helen, all of New
York Cty, whoe visit here for
the Pt two weeks Iwas pleas.
ant, left yesterday for their
home.
Miss Mumle G. Jacks, of
Clearwater, passed through
Gaineville yesterday a route
to Jacksonville.
William Andrews of Jackson-
le, passed through Game-

GOLDWATER'S COLUMN

Castro: How

Long to Wait?

By BARRY GOLDWATER
U.S. Senator
The Panama rioting, the
terrorism in Venezuela and
the successful overthrow of
the legally-constituted gov.
ernment of Zanzibar have
presented President John-
son with the knottiest foreign
policy problem of his new
administration.
In all three cases, troops
and revolutionaries trained
by Fidel Castro were respon-
sible, and therein lies the
rub.
How long can we permit the
Soviet manned bastion of
Cuba to go ondisrupting the
Western Hemisphem?
How long can we permit
Cuba to go on druptng the
Western Hemis re?
How long can we permit
Cuba to go on exportig vio-
lence, treachery and aggre
sion to nations in our own
front year?
All we seem to get from
government officials is con-
firmation and more confir-
mation that things are very
bad and growing worse.
For example, Defense Sec-
retary Robert McNamara
s the latest member of the
administration to view with
alarm the developnents in
solving Castro ad the Latin-
American family of nations.
On Jan. /, the Defense So
arytold td the Hol Amed
Services Comlbts hih
there is sohl eMe that
weapons ae-thia idt kom
Cuba to dism t group is
other LatAirgi m -
triesm
'Thai Mr. IMlm wl
,to sly:
Into exploit i bogtd
rieme d ia d o-

(to eql too ul) w
Lata-Ia V bf a

viue oma pt M
,bie pr. an psWad
ntioa sd h uo Asiee

may be pee t p r-

In. hisuft ft%

uh as sCM e a- m

IkM

the recent discovery of a
cache of Cuban-supplied arms
in Venezuela was a case in
point and proved that wea-
pons as well as guidance and
money and open propaganda
are being exported from
Cuba. He added that Cua
tro is struggling with an eco-
nomic crisis, but that his
"grip on the people through
the use of police-state meth-
ods is still unbroken."
Even the hardiest of gov-
ernment doubters now ac-
knowledge the fact that Cas-
tro is playing hob with the en-
tire hemisphere. But none of
them tells us what, if any.
thing, is going to be done
about it On this score, Secre-
tary MNamara was no help
at all.
After detailing the current
activities of Cnmmunit Cuba
and forecasting more trouble
from the same source, the see-
retary concluded:
"We are continuing our ef-
forts to isolate Cuba from the
free word, thus increasing
the Soviets' burden of sup-
porting the Cuban economy."
This would seem to indicate
that American policy is to
wait aid hope I t se day
the Soviets will go broke and
decide that a showcase for
hemisphere wide activities
are no ler worth ppor
tag.
BotlIqsttha lesq
ma Cani is as summ il
making table forth Unite
States i be has been up to
ti po inte Rusians wil
fld a way to keep the Cuba
UMnM alin.

Islatills
1 MJLK

PATENT IN HOSPITAL
Frank Blake is a patient in
the Alachua General Hospital.
Mrs. F. D. Sanmon, reporter.

Ue University City Floral
Club will hold its meeting today
at 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Lottie Banks. Mrs. Do rothy
Jackson, president; Mrs. Annie
Davis, reporter.
SLATES MEETING
The Ladies' Auxiliary of the
American Legion Post No. 306
Marie Allen. of 805 NE 24th
Terrace, today at 8 p.m.

Obituaries
WARREN JONES
Funeral services for Warren
Jones, a veteran of World War
II, will be held at the Mt. Plea-
sant Methodist Church Thurs.
day at 3:30 p.m. Interment will
follow in the Mt. Pleasant Ceme-
tery. Rev. W. M. Ferguson will

The Signs Grow, Murky
From tie Cewles Weehiagton Bureou
WASHINGTON A Federal Trade Commission proposal
to equire health hard warnings on every pack ot cigarettes
s inspiring inventive minds around the country.
Long lists of machines, foods, tonics, beverages, buildings
and vehicles that should carry similar warnings are being
drafted by people who think the government snoulu ou moit
to protect us from ourselves. Here are some samples:
Front and rear bumper stickers for the car: "This is a
lethal instrument. Last year similar instruments iUlled 43,t00
Americans on the streets and hlughways. FIT oroer 17-500 (A)."
Whisky bottle sticker: "More than 30,000 members of Alco-
hoics Anonymous wish they'd never tasted the stuff. In large
doses, known to cause picked livers and divorce."
Power mowers: "Forty-tkee toes were lost m one county
alone last year from the feet of people who used this machine."
Milk bottle legend: "The contents of this bottle may add to
your cholesterol count, often plugging the valves of your
heart with an unseemly sludge. If broken, this bottle can
cause blood poisoning to bare feet. Use with caution."
Hem label on women's dresses: "Warning to men! The con-
tents of this package can break up your home."
Sign on back of airline seat: "You are taking this ride at
your peril. Sister planes of this model have crashed on four
continents and ditched in two oceans."
Flip-top beer can: "Twenty-five dollar prize for anybody
who can open 17 of these without badly tearing a thumb.
Heavily endorsed by doctors whose patient load for thumb
injuries has increased enormously since invention of this can."
Sign in hospital reception room: "Enter at your own risk.
Last year 14 patients who survived minor surgery succombed
to a staphylococcus infection contracted in this hospital."
Label on bottle of antibiotic pills: "Side effects of this drug
are incalculable. This much can be said. One side is irritating
and the other side painfuL"
Sign over hotel bath tub: "Not responsible for injuries to
personnel while under the influence of soap. Most accidents
in this type of tub are fatal or worse."
Large sign at Leos Angeles city limits: "This metromania
definitely hazardous to all forms of human life. People who
breathe our smog should stop immediately; our freeways un-
safe. Motorists urged to turn back here."
U.S. Treasury note on the dollar bill: "Spend this swiftly.
It is depreciating two milk a minute while you stand there.
If kept overnight, wash bill thoroughly to prevent infection
from germs which inhabit money."
ip over university stadium: "Do not watch football games
hee if you have a heart history. I"st year 33 of our spectat-
on died of heart attacke-ad td hme triple-threat quarter-
badk is running thi ye's teas apin."
abel on sugar carton: "Unsael for diabetics except under
doctors prescription. Also tends to make consumers over-
weight, a prominent factor in the death rate."
p I obstetricia's office: "Think twice before you bring
thil buby 6o the world. lU Hs e pectaney will be 70J
years. Do you wat a chld of es I to die of old age?"

POTOMAC FEVER
BY Hacher lMd Cwlek Wsh uta BDnM
The FCC sas radio and TV are media of information as well as entertain-
mIt. Where could you learn that four out'of five doctors recommend

1 HOURS THURSDAY 9:30 A.M. to 11:30 A.M.=J
Advertiing help to reduce consumer demand for scarce commodities by di.
verting public demand to other more readily available commodities.
Newspaper advaeising brings the merchants' "showcase" into your home.

wares

Ladies! Take Advantage of These Low-Priced "Needed" Items
Exciting .Values Not Advertised. 3 Days Only . So Hurry

Mtsy With U.S. o
were the
upo which the Soiet party Tlird emational under his in. in *
hu de dl l relation wi fluen, Hucng Chi said: coe
other Cmm it parties l its "ai demostrates that like d the
pos e toward the U. S. everything else the internation- forest in
San ustve historical re- al working class movement 7f t
view the divisions In the tends to divide itself in two. ed enin
world movement, including L- he class struggle between the support
n's decision to bolt the Second proletariat and the bourgeoisie m
laernational and form the is inevitably reflected in thesplit

ed Ie The charge that the Soviet
ll e dM that U n i o n had Joined with the
Is assoiateUnited States in a plot to rule
test revisionists
t they had be-the world was the culmina-
Soviet and "open tion of a propaganda campaign
tes for capitalist undertaken by Peking with the
Soviet Union." :apparent aim of convincing the
e nd EnIRIo(ot peoples of Asia. Africa and Lat-
Ian and Engels Min
its thesis that re- in America that the two mao
ievitably led to a jor powers were a common en-

REARDON: The White House
s announced the resignation
frka its staff of Timothy J.
Rerdon, a long-time aide of
the late President Kennedy.
o making the announcement,
WP ite House news secretary,
Perre sau ler said Reardon
wld remain in the govern
met as special assistant to Jo-
seph W. Barr, chairman of the
Federal Deosit Insuran C or
leardon becomes the third
the third dose adviser to leave
the White House staff since
iJohnson became T
X Special : Mz
So son and assistant Arthur
iSchlesinge reigoned arier to
write books.

(Cumased fr
paper I note another article
announcing the Presidents
drive on poverty. Poverty Is
defiled as, a family mak.
Ing W, or less." Are you
aware that the begmnni sal-
ary for teachers in this county
is barely more than tha fig-
ure less than a thousand dol-
lars?
Have you taken a look at
smine of our buildings lately?
Have you seen our overew
ed classes? Have you talked
to harried teachers struggling
to teach too many with too
little supplies, materials and
help and too many demands
on the time am' talents they
have available? Have yoe
talked to the clerks in Chest-
outs where teachers come ev-
eryday to buy supplies they
need for children out of their
own pockets that should have
been provided by the taxpay-
ers?
Have you seen hot, sweating
liMe& children trying to leara
to read while battling thousr
hands of gats because our
schools have no screens oi
their windows? The question
are endless.
The lain fact that a of us
need to comprehend is this:
Our schools are shamefly
financed. They have been for
years ad last years' laky-
panky in the tax assessor' of-
fice only made matters worse.
Thsr is a limit to bow far
teachers ca o n "making
do." hpereendents cannot
pmdu- miraces fomer
without n adequate budget
Good schools must be paid
for. It is ae our e ty
faced Ma respom lsfi

t
quiarey and set ub ao adem
ate iaD ial t st dture
fror public schobos. LAt us
nM e tomistake about it Xte
comg ofdt h postal is an
achievement for town but
a for its c n. a
we do,
ese chrO are on
thfr way. T em ing pre-
Miks us with t4 pomlde
"sw that broke tbe camel's
b* Shal we have the
fea th ing in hsta and
t oddes thing sMhoob?
we have al our town a
griat university m4 grubby
p"k sbok?
IL s break do!edeadlock
In tax asse 's office.
W4 wanted tw.iely bp*
tal now let us remove to pay
for! it. While we avor the
Sit wil bring 6s wn
u, let us agree to hare the
wealth with our ch I
siily do not believe our ci.
si arere really willing to
pay for the schools this com
munaity could and should have.
Ites time we taxedaouneh. to
provide the school they need
and deserve. By great com-
mnia ert, we brug te
hospital to Gainemevie. Now
let us exet an equa effort to
solve the problems hat come
along With iL
ARTUR W COMBS
---
NEEDED
hi me Na tabs hid .
I" *a" A ffk tramIn k C
W t F -twu m ,
Pi men. Cd Wr I l"
4K(-27li

The Hoe of' Gonmel
Try our Noon Lunches

tmau ella's
_m We iL W IVJTT AVINUS

Suburbia

'SexMRing

Uncovered

MNOLA, N.Y. tnlm
women, a of the mmari and
me of them mhaers, me
ben take into ctdy here to
the bmveptigatio d a ar
Sring said to haeUnted
Slw ayea inm proimtitMd
feL

he 13 women were se as
i- al w e and were
bhed I various amounts of bal
Disrit Attorney WiMia
Ca f Nas Couty also an-
oaned that a Hckville mboth-
er thrne and a Manhattan e.
t daerk we arreed on tar-
ges d poEring for postitdtio
or atptinq ink.u ww en
to became pattei.
Cahn described the woae In
the alleged ellgirl oeratimo
as "typical housewives who live
in split-level houses in suburb-
a." He said that some of the
wins were living with their
huabnds, bidciinhg one wom-
an whose husband was said to
have stayed at home to baby-
sit with their children so that
fte mother would be able to
ppena a roetbti
te district attorney descrb
ed' d alleged e ring as
"m-ch bigger" tthen ab-
er of arrests and sem a idi-
caed. He said that many of the
im wives had take up pros.
titution because they thought
their hands did not make
enough money and they were
having troubles with household

Cah reported that the women
dcharged S to *$10 and that
-ame "stopped after apparent-
ly getting enough moneyy"
TheM women were said to have
been especially active during
the Roosevelt Raceway mm
ain Westbry, when contacts
were made for them with track
patrons. One woman was said
to have made i, 000 In one
year.

Corporation
Chartered

TALLAHASSEE Secretary
of State Tom Adams today an-
no nced the chartering of the
Professional Assistance Corp-
oration, 1105 W. University Ave.
The new charter allows deal-
pgs a rel and personal pro
perty.
Named as incorporators in
the charter are John A. Webb,
Ballard W. Webb, Norb H.
Webb ad Gwynn S. Webb, all
of Gainesvlle.

Mrs. Earl Russell Jr, pic-
volunteer members of the
a's Club, who assist Dr.
me of the many indigent
dental treatment.

presented on the Ranger Hal
Show Saturday morning.
The Junior Woman's Club al-
so has been instrumental in
providing for a dental assistant
on the dinic staff, and has do-
nated dental health teaching
The Gainesville Junior Wom-
aD's Club has afforded many
children a way to enjoy good

dental health.

L

S U "A,"-" II r I iryIi
St. Patrick's Catholic Church,
Mardi Gras Din roerDance,m H L
pa.m, Holiday Inn.
By UHE ISE CRUY ,e sIkiers uj) makes a wonder- hnch boxes should have the
DA HELOI V ful "puly "- type clothesline? name on the outside, too. Fin-.
B rid'DEAR HEIE: It is so strong, does not break gemail polish does a wonderful
To replace broke handles. or stretch and keeps itself job for this printing.
Stherwise good purses, 1 i Iean! You'd be surprised how many
Chain dog coarsM I have had my ski tow children DONT KNOW which
o. pet p ti of clotheslinefor four years now h ch is THEIRS at noontime!
Astore! i nwand it's Ju like new. The cod andhow those lunches get
U DAY, Fe ary Tese dog collars coe the sam as the reg mied up . we teachers
various lnght so you ae uar clothedine rope. will never know.
Wedding of Miss Sophia Ann tofind one just the right se A READER B.K.B.
Gocek, daughter of Mrs. Frankto fit your purse with no sh -t- *
Gocek andthe late Mr. Gock, ening needed.Thy alsd com e
and William E. Shepard, son of in either silver or gold apd f Tl hth I MrveT Iea! Youth Club
Mr. and Mrs. Crawford Utes match any purse. ISEA
of igh Springs, 7:30 p. m., These dog cor have a r i Coun iMeets
Mikesville Presbyteria on ech e which make t m DEAR liEWISE: The G vi Youth Club,
Chuyh& attractive and also easyjto s it., Hirs a ggestion for moth. sponsored by the Gainesville
tub to the pursue And th'vn --- sponsored by the Gainesville
SATURDAY,FekaryI t to the P who lave trouble (and Recretion Department wil ,in,
an ru inrnpirv Just who 4 't?) getting t new s l offices hmsday t
Sor MiU A ,0a ,hI! my h nd pi- baby to go to sleep after 7:30 p.m., during the monthly
Purvis, fiancee of Billie Nug d out (As e sokin* ; t his fedi: council eil.
ent Ninicht Jr. of Jackso. ed the new handle for ) Whm y' pick up te baby Danny Rogers will mcceed
ville, 12: p.m., Mrs. C. Addi. that these chains are to feed him put a beating pad Roger Peek No Youth Club is
son Pound Jr. and Mrs A. ed links which makes th jon low heat, or a hot water hot-scheduled this Saturday night
Husey, Gainesville Golf and u than tie, in his bed. Then after you at the Recreation Center be.
Country Club. nary ch in. have fed and burped the baby, cause of the Gainesville High
My favorite purse s n1yw remove the pad and put him School Basketball game with
Lret..dy for l another san Ibackinapice warm bed. ThisjOc which will be played
Mothers Club an maybe eve mow I.wf he lp o umh tolhere.
I ban is ago. Grownups don't
M eets Thurs. t the ogal e co,e back to a cold
Mrs. Theodore S. George wil bed . .i bet babies don't,
entertain the University Moth either
ers' Club for its February meel-. Nw ea't e original MAXINE HOOVER
ing tomorrow with a eofte at umy htIm y.JM t thit *, W /
1a. aiher homeW in ll NW dINdfte p ey* ;I e& Y predMs m ther . .
3rd Street g ehg fn r wrea. HeE h of
This clubbisope to all moth- r. DEAR HIOHISE:
ers of University of Florida A Please eourage aD parents
0 Unlaasa ... .. I__ --- 1

faculty members wo are per who end:theirchdldto school
maent Gaineville residents or DEAR HELISE. t with a luh bhag to PRINT
viit here for he whter sea Did you know thaL a nybn their dt' name on the tsack
MLo. ski tow line (the line thlt IM. with a daltr color crayp. Aml
cUr THIS COUPO I

There is nothingmore exit. and you can't if your clothes
ng gratifying than doing arehanging on you. The visual
meeting we have been want- Impact will be rewarding. This
Sg to do, buthave put off, over also gives you an opportunity
an over'again, because we to envision what wonderful
e payi the price for the thing the loss of another five
rise we onged for. When we or lponds will do for you.
finally make up our mind, and Once those curves begin to come
sacceed, it makes s mochi out of hiding, nothing will stop
--. ._ -r --.-*** i i i *i

more self-confient an uilds
our self-respect It makes us
feel and look years younger.
That is what is happening to
thousands of women who are
following my Eight-week Beau-
ly Improvement Plan. They are
sticking to an eight-week pro-
gram, under my direction, to
see how much they can improve
their appearance in that length
of time.
For one day each week during
this period I am bringing these
readers more encouragement
and information. When you
reach the midway point I have
a suggestion for you which I
know will be helpful. It will be
helpful to any reducer whether
or not she is following BIP
(Beauty Improvement Plan).
New Measarements

Prop_ Are Necessary
Don't be ashamed of using
such "crutches" to reinforce
your determination should it
falter. Most folks need such
props. Most people have to "pep
talk" themselves, whether they
are trying to lose weight, be-
come more tolerant, more for-
giving or learning to bake a
better cake.
If y.o missed my Eght.
Week Beauty Improvement
Plan and would like to have
the BIP Kit which gives you
complete directions and my
ique BIP Wal Chart send
25 cents (plus 15 cents for
postae and hanfdl) with
your printed name ad ad-
dress to Josephine lwman
n care of the Galassville

At this time It is smart to have
a couple of your dresses or out- C, -T=,
fits taken in to fit your new mea- ISJ ",ift
surements. Even though you
have not yet reached your goal' UI
do this. Unless you can sew
yourself, or have a friend or re- b WuUyB U
native who can do alterations' j~ at a? drinking m bea"
--"-- rom O f. bat 8noyiUbkddgr irri.
for you, it would be expensive, t..--m.ai yon frhe mlau. m,..
*o -d I l -lo-f- orthlbe. Aid if mslthlm aisht,
to have all of your clothes alter- witha nih nhke.u ldeormn&.
ed a this sage, and there would d a i eoaetion1 adi
be no point in. doing so, since 'roMIT-don'twait-try Do'an si*.
they will have to be taken in Ud.I-T ,ham a inff o
again later on. bad fd -A fart pabh. .
uahe, mueular ae and plin$. t-Aj
However at this point you f n*rfUMly d diuic aetlo, tin t
.. o it i
should see for yourself how tW. es .1.ofW- k tub7.. ot. C ttW
much better you look than when "h t illio w
mwm h le you s Jtar losi weigh for oer 6 For eonronMly 21:
when you started losing weight. 10 ,larg e C Fo-, r no dvi

Rotary Meet
Dr. Myron W. Wheat, pro,
feur of surgery at the J. Hil-
lis ufie Health Center, talked
yesterday at the Ga nesville o-
tary Cb on threat bug
Dr. Wheat showd fil slides
on how improvements in the
mieme aope a fabled doc-
tors to get a "birds-eye view"
of human tissue, especially
heart tissue.
Dr. Wheat said a new type
Sof microscope called the dec-
tron microscope and radioac-
tive materials have shown doc-
. tors for the firsn te te r-
ence of Digitalis in bthe heart
tissue.
"By Injecog radioacie Di-
Sgialis io the heart tsue, we
can a the *g in the t ue
through* e dectroe mere
cope," Dr. Wheat aid. "lbe
radioactive Digitalis gi off
particles which can be detected
with the electron mankMop
and this allows us to trace
where the Digiutas goea.
Digitalis is one of our most
Indisp able drup r bh r
disease, and by usi radioc-
tive substances and the ee-
tron microscope, we will be able
to exactly how D ta
works in the heart tissue in a
few years," he said.
I He said research on Digital
Is has be made poible rom
funds of the Florida Heart As-
moiation and the Heart Fud.
S In other business, Rotary
Club president Fred T. Laugh-
on Jr. named Ed Peck, Harld
Gert, ad Bob Coleman as
a nomating committee to ap
point a new board o director

As a eam npo: not too
many weeks ago, e d the
cows ecaped- d thm men
were forced to um s up their
diity ad play ewboy, a*
the college campus as a comrraL

SHIPMENT
of 1964
Ramblr &r Jeep

NOW

THE STORE Wif HORE
tAkIlLE SHOl ING C~w
1n302 NNa W N STREET

14

w

PROFESSIOAL LADI

1.

His Oats

WASHINGTON Measured
by th sudden spWt I his
peaking commitmnts, M ch-
ard M. Nixon's avalablity a
his party's nominee for p -
dent has grow five l.
More than at. Nim teo md
to be provocati and critc
of the Johno administration
now that the Predwnt hm
take polcy poitI to a M
ber of are.
These speeches ll A cus
largely a affair t
o Feb. 11 to ICAnIu, i,
Sfamr vimc prmI l w- l
deliver what he trms "a mA-
jor s.eech andva rights "
Somme a t' e I uinr pw
porters, hav eadse new at-
tachumes take the am his
Increasing a ccti li ty nal1y.
They view t as overweeamg
ambitl that is t od
the party.
This mw ea s aeSa
however, of the demandS a
on Nits 111 0lm a MKA,
innumeih )lvItrif tof
s speak, wMr 5W ad to

UF Press Prints
W ingBook
A book pubW d by the
Usiversity Florida prm hasu
bem recaped I n the itb w
Ma, Saoulae Book COu pt
a for ce in typ y
ad design.
Along with other wi i
books, it wiibe displayed Inl
libraries hrouhout the a
try.
T1 e book Is "Moots of Fril-
da" by Dr. Rth S. Dem, a'
professor botany at Florida
State University. It's received
wide ritical acclaim since it
m Ii pubhed in June, i.n

Young Scientists OK FOR YOUR
i des seheited lectres by made in college, and some have in te "Business Opportunities"
IdS"s hi Slris g fild* already manude their mark in column in the Classified Section
Ty be a em ml ad have scientific history with their TODAY
accm= b he Uiversity's II teiriTODAY
-rary a iliIies,

Dr. Howard Wens was in-
ddtled as presdK of the
ys Club at a baquet Friday
Elected to serve with him
were Dr. Ben Samuel and Dr.
I.'rvng Weintraub, vice-pre-
dnsu; Robert Ommings,
rary; and Don McDowe
Mre.
New members of the boardof
directors are Keith Austln, W.
&I: (Sonny) Lee, Hal Ingma,
Chtrle Denny I and James
WkderUc. All wereinstalled
by pst-preidstit Di Sa .
lan and Boy Pqs wentto
Jack Bates, Jack Uoore, Cabot
Corporation, Denny Concrte
C !pay, Alex Frank, Ray-
mood Botsa and Joe Richard.
so. nThe Perry McGriff and
Sunyland Packing company
shared theMan and Boy Award.
Executive Director Mike
Kresha presented the annual
nt
Also on the program was the
Boys' Cb choir and Mrs. Ata
Bratvold, a Manatee County
juvenile counselor and a former
spy for the Federal Bean d
Investigation.

'Miss Jeanie'
Contest Set
For Feb. 15
A 1964 singing version of
"Jeanie with the light brown
hair" will be crowned at White
Springs Feb. 15.
She'll be chosen from a field
of U contestants who a seek-
lag the title of "MiA Jnie."
The title was originated on the
band of the Smwset River
here as a memorial to Stephen
Foler.
The winner will receive a
$fp scholardip to n l the
stidy of music.
To enter, she must be a Flor-
da girl, an advanced maUlan
ad between 17 and ilyea old.
The winner wil be crowned at
a 2th annual Jeaie Ban.
The event is sponsored by the
Stephen Foster Memorial Coa*.
mission and the Florida Feder-
ation ol Muic Cha.
Prize Painting
Is On Display
Florida Untea's "in0 Pw
Oae Prin PaNting wE l be
1p1yed I the scod floor
dhly case at ie t on tru
I "e wa ed.
aNY pr at loE u dine
spn m .

The f, tue .psid the
cramp oam a geer-
-as hut of P. K.You&e char-
by last itw, as b-rdenm
North Marion ommd to
bulbeye Blue Wave shoot-
ing, 41 in the PKY Gym.
P LT Yoge made it a
'tem" affair frm the very
b-ing They juped out
tob eary lOd, as all
five starters bhit for field
S goalsa .
had PKY generosity didn't
slop at jut the Blue Wave
team ammbers. Early PKY
fh aemt Colt eagersn to the
first peals. And when the

opening quarter cam to a
dioe, PKY was abhd 1.M--
but *t d North Mari's
pints had m from the free
throw lime.
WaeaKd mdI
It was a weakmned lon
of the Colt cagers that took the
floor at PKY for the opening
tipoff. Several played a
just getting aer a t with
the flu and maoer Senior
Henry DeVere, is out with
the momps.
What's moe, with just 6:2
remninsig i the last period,
Colt star Bll Davis ddly
doo ved wr ad fe to he
flo thout any apparent
reson. A hu fell over the
crowd a the layers ceard

Florida

Seats

Only 5,752

lhore GymaI sa m anaer than anyone wants to give
Smadt hor big.
D. K. Stanley, head of the College of Physical Edscation,
had the pym "coMued," eat by meat, each flnch width of
e, ror to Florid's big pm with Kentcky last Sturday

wrd bt ha bsa Ry w *
Maldlfbltoh i SC Isto
thbe a 1od a i mkbet I
the commiry.
He adiled do th&s awe
a few who are "pig btack-

w"hat's o but y," e said be
"We sAmk bm mmen
tb24 wit labo s haM-
dtm exur."
undorffa m oid dlca am
a mk SeC toIravl muad
Setan amount of mey
for r and fd. aiey are
rotated o that na SEoffial
M an y toem i the league
more than four tdSa a ama-
aO.
Propecti are ctanly be.
g swindled. Modrffl said
he watch many hi school
and oee bfeshiman pose
a mam, seeking good ffic-
als. He said he looks forpolse,
ense of values, fair play, in-.
terpretation of the rules. He

Tight Battle
aEpiND l? b -
Eagles we forced to b1
the final period n laht r IT
a nurrw 51- upa wen ow
a KrT laW d el WVs
Te B1S, Iwhom reJd
m is m, trailed by a
pahle da a qer, by the
at ka nd by sid starol
as th last pea.
Th Horae* Meal4y,

Action in basketball is co-,
tham thusi making an ofi-
clas task re difficult, M -
drff said. In footba he
ned, actual play com e
11% ikdues out of In
bukebal., it's 2 minutes
au of A
Muimorff aid basketball
ne, as wen as football, are
I need of a major revamp-
He took me uesharply
Sthe age coaches who
"ra teiugh" changes with-
out ay research or trial of
the rule.
Specifically, Mundorff listed
the one-and-one bonus foul
rule, the intentional foA and
the lack of an adequate rule
to prevent late-game stalling.
Mundorff said the one-and-
one makes a foul penale
more later in the game than
earlier. He said possess of
the beallU hi worth I points
and a foul shot one; therefore,
a team committing an inten.
tional foul generally achieves
its objective without getting
hurt. He suggests the team
fouled also retain possession
of the ball at mid-court He
would eliminate the one-and-
one foul provision.
As regards the stalling,
Mundorff noted basketball had
a "three-second, five-second ,
10-second and 5-second rule."
The latter three are designed
to prevent stalling but have
not succeeded, he said. Mun-
dorff favors a rule to force
action.
"Take the baskets off the
floor," he said. "How many
people will come just to see
two teams play keepaway?"
Mundorff said the growth of
basketball in the South suffer.
ed from climate and lack of
facilities for years. He noted
proudly that just four years
ago seven of the top 10 teams
in the final poll of the season
came from the South, three
from the SEC. He said new
and bigger basketball arenas
would continue to improve the
caliber of play.

Chairs Fly

After Upset

OfSeabreeze
TITUSVILLE, (AP) -
Tkasville High School's
basketball team upset Day-
tbau Beach Seabreeze W
1 tonight Ia a game that
ended in a free for all.
Folding chairs were
thrown at the final whistle
and the 200 or so fans pour-
ed onto the court. One teen-
ager grabbed a radio mie-
rophone and begua yell-
og his complaints about
the officlatiag.
"It was a madhouse for
a while," sakd ee specit
ior who managed to stay
oat of the uproar.
No arrests were made
and one suffered aay
lajuries of coeseqence.

Hutchinson

Progressing

Satisfactorily
SEATTLE (AP)-Treatments
have reduced the size of the
malignant chest tumor from
which Fred Hutchinson, manag-
er of the Cincinnati Reds, is suf-
fering and doctors are pleased
with the progress.
"It is extremely gratifying,"
Dr. Orliss Wildermuth of the
Swedish Hospital Tumor Insti-
tute said. 'Normally, at this
stage of treatment we are hap-
py if the tumor has stopped
growing,"
Dr. Wildermuth said Hutchin-
son "is progressing very satis-
factorily" and probably will be
able to report for spring train-
ing at Tampa, Fla., March 1.
Hutch was making no predic-
tions Tuesday.

POMPANO BEACH (AP) -
Haress racing got off to a wet
sairt a south Florida Tuesday

Ace of Spades won the $15M0e
halue at Pmp.ano in a driving
raestorm after a day-long dri
de turned into a downpour mid.
may in the eigitrace program.
Ace of Spades, drive by Dr.
Frank Todd, pad the mile in
I mines I and 2-5 secads,
basket time of t night, and
m b a photothish.
Spr- g Romance was second
ad Irish Senator third in the
fleM d ight
A ttal of 4,1 parsoMn bet
$35 astheS optig progam.

stroyer, with Buck Thornburg,
and Big Felly, no rider assigned.
Geology, under 116 pounds,
will have Larry Gilligan aboard,
While the others will pack 112
pounds. They are: Alphabet,
with Braulio Beza; High Fi-
nance, no boy; Special Prince,
Don Brumfield; Reply Mail, no
boy; Sun Like, Mickey Solo-
mone; Greek Episode, John
Sellers, and Wee Jewel, no boy.

Bacardi Cup
MIAMI (AP)-Competitors In
the Bacardi Cup Star Class
Championship took a day off to.
day. The final two races in Ohe
series of five are scheduled
Thursday and Friday.
R. I. Stearns of Northbrook,
I1M., rode a steady 1-knot south.

east winds to a 10-yard triumph
HWaeahRun over leader James Schoonmak-
er of Miami Beach in Tuesday's
MWC (AP) Staen of the race. Stearns covered the 10.
mp itt "fear-ods in training mile triangular course over Bis-
I thI au were to rn at His cayne Bay in one hour and 41
ah *ay In te wP added minutes.
MhaM akes, a major prep However, Schoonmaker, win-
for is Flamingo March 3. ner of the previous two races
High weights in the field are improved his standing. With 5
r. Brick, Roman Brother and peits, he holds a margin of 10
Bper, each carrying l2s the field.
pal. Riders an the top three Read Ruggles of Miami, thid
we he Walter am, anuel Tueday, is second with 5
Yema and B Nartack repeo points. Stearns is tied with E.w.
eeI. Etichels of Old Greenwich, Cona.,
l Ithe w ihts at Ui at 4 points.
po"t wE be Jourist, under Doe never of Vermilion, Olio,
1 i atmbers, ad Duel, is enat with 53. TDrward Know.
wit0 J&iL RW, each asgn-Ilee of Na ,a Bahamas, and d-
ad peaks feing fchampo Howard L?
At linp=u6will be Delfr-piycottoflivertoo.N.J.,foliow
bi, wit Bob Us"y: Bold Do- with 51 points each.

CaO aY -Seior lcky to play cautious ball. During the
r pu. p p t 27 points to fal perod Cedar Key Ou
lead Cedar Key to a m- win scoar the Bea rs -L
ever DideCoumty'B e Desive standout Gibba
inipeHd"ck battle here l lliaflm t ed t for be Die
lght. It was the 14th win in 15 b de asive fourth
a for the -lead quarter. Up until that time, he
S. had done a yeoman's job de

S The game's outcome was n
oubt until mid-way in the final
period, when Cros City en
'tountered foul trouble and had

Jasper, 5048
MAYO Mayo's Hornets
Jumped out to a qick lead here
last night, but had to fight off a
stubborn Jasper team to pro-
serve a hardearned 504 wi
Wilburn Ben! paced the may
attack with x points, followed
by Wayne Smith, with &.

threats Hit Lawtey
Then over the last weekend, Air Line depot. "You are going
in a prelude to the council meet- to die." And in the afternoon,
ing on Monday, the intimidation another one stating. "Tell Le.s-
threats switched to Phillips, as lie his time is up."
a possible replacement for Scott Sheriff P. D. Reddish said
o the CounclL yesterday afternoon his uffce
Anonymous pboue calls un is working on the case. "We are
a&- .--.- La in U....-. -, f doing all we can ha id

WASHINGTON We bam
this aide who works for ai s a
we must say he's becmbs
qui a probm.
Jut the ot er day we sad.
"B-bby, take m photo
prars down to the pot office
andS mail them for me."
"Yes, ir," he said, "bt be-

An Imperiend MWyer
who liste in during a xpert
po.t-morte will o hear tle
remark: "I knew I hd tldight
car'or the wrgm e as
the case may be. The com ft d
"right" cards and "wrg"
cards is an important me that
gets curry trmIe n t i the
textbooks.
A I Cmwe oami
when one player dicatesa
good beMiad hand and thre
seem to be slam peiilities in
of the two t. The ler
partner miost thi ren em his

fluE NI -m I -m in.
to accotL N T.
Honor eards in the two key 2
suits must always be "right,"4
although the jack of trumps bhas 6
no great signifn ce te
combined hands are known to mon .-
have at least aine cards in the
agreed sui. On the other hd, even s
queens and acks in the de rffed,
its are pry ure to befollow t
"wrong." One king in a side clb tri
it -but not two-may pr only on

meful, while aces, of courne,

are pearls.

Other features which would
favor optimin are extra trump
length and a hortam in the p.
tential declared's second long
sit To bold thee or four small
cards in the secondary suit is
almost sure to be a liability.
These considerations played
a part in today's deal, which
was played at rubber bridge.
North's opening bid of one no
trump with oly 15 hig ard
points would not appeal to
mom players, bhut the useful
fiveard suit was sufficient
euse for sightly stretclhmg
the requirements.
South sed e tama
vention to discover that North
did not have a fnrcrd major
suit and followed with a forcing
jump to three pades. North's

raise to far spade showed
three-card support, but was
sightly discouraging: With a
mazimumn opening bid, a spade
fit, and slam prospects, North
would have made acUM-bid at
the level of four.
South showed his brea sut t at
the five-level, a clear slam invi-
tation, and North recoidared.
He could see that all his cards
were "right" with the emption
of the club jack. He would have
preferred another d ad
more and one m e heart, which
would have offered prospects of
aeart ruff, but e was quite
justiied in jumping to six
spades. If North had bid oly

the bea

dINg:

PaU 246
Pass 3 4
Pass 59
Pass Pass
led the queen of

ade spill. A club was
a-d whs East failed to
here wa b hope of a
ick become dummy had
e rmmiing entry. wn
rts aso failed to break

South wa down one.

A little more thought would
have shown South that t was
vital to Ie the frt cdub
trick, not the second. This pre-
serves the club ace an entry
to dummy,and the fifth e
can be established and casubed

five spades, South would have
passed.
The slam conriseS wasi mdu
and South could ee various
chances of making It There
were 11 top trick, thanks to the
perfect fit which North had
been able to visualize and tiher
we various plays for a 12th.
An even heart split would make
the ruff unnecessary.
A third chance was to estab-
lish a club trick, and South ab.
ed for that possibility immedi-
ately by winning the diamond
lead m dummy and playing
the ace and another cdub. East
won and led a diam d, whih
South ruffed.
The spade ace was cashed
and a spade was led to the kt,
destroying South's hopes ofi an

You'll find stickers with the above message on oil furnaces in
new '64 homes in Highlond Court Manor--nother in a long
list of significant improvements being mode continuously by
Kirkporick ond Pierson.
Whot it means, of course, is that oil new '64 homes hove fur-
noces which will accommodate a central oir-conditioning unit
for your added comfort in the summer. Ask about it today-it
con be installed at any time.
Over 20 Mdel, Pried From
$120 to $17250
VA and MA Appred
Fm Mem ekip in idImn,
RdmsmsRsied wim CIM

and to gine a tal eak to pa.
- p-t b tCud &hO
college
tere samed to be a good
dchnce the m1blio tax-cut
bill would be paed by Tiu-
dayiht we ahead of the
tier apctd ualier.
SLa R"
Ky., plmed to offer the amend-
mot to repl the oiek tax
n the amlloe of Repubican-
leader Everett Mir, ,, l,
who b knpialiud.
Repbicam cnod theb i.

A marvelous, magic tric complete with and atructfons-one min
each Twins Package! Values to 50. Ths tricks were epedally selected by
Mr. Matomuse andiatetabadultaasw dr but theyareeasy
for counters to perfct Hum e are two of the 25 different kicks included in
this offer: -. .

VANISHING
COIN

Get a quarf a frimkd, pilceu
itmidwahanky.Ilthihadom
to it and drop it in a Sgla He
Ia it dink, move hadlr-
dci'tlleeaningenff???